Many
multinationals around the world are now staffed by what amounts to a
two-tier workforce. Employees enjoy protected employment advantages,
while the outsourced people who keep the workspaces running – who
clean them and keep them safe – often have more precarious roles
with inferior terms and conditions. Cleaners, security guards and
catering staff at multinational companies, universities, hospitals
and other big organisations are often employed by other companies.
The
two-tier system means the balance of power at outsourcing firms is
firmly in favour of the client: they won’t want to lose a valuable
customer.
Client companies using outsourced workers often insist in
contracts that they retain the right to request a worker be removed,
said Molly De Dios of the United Voices of the World union, a large
proportion of whose members work in the cleaning sector. And the
clients use that right.
“Unfortunately,
client requests for removal are very common,” said De Dios. The
union has heard allegations about cleaning companies colluding with
clients when they want to get rid of an outsourced worker for a
spurious reason without repercussions.
United
Voices of the World, which is currently involved in seven live
disputes in the UK, fights to bring cleaners in-house. “Outsourcing
is a complete farce, it shouldn’t exist at all – it’s
terrible,” De Dios said. ‘“It leaves workers with fewer rights
and it means the clients who are essentially the employer (because
the cleaners are cleaning their site) aren’t legally responsible or
liable for anything.” Outsourced workers are treated as a
disposable and inferior workforce, said De Dios.
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